Days 1–4
Everyone stakes a claim
The town square woke loud. Aldric Venn proposed his stone bridge and the tolls to pay for it; within the same breath, gate-warden Mira Coblehand noted the night-crossing tolls "show coin, but the day-roll doesn't match," and Lady Sabine Corr told the square outright that "our Guildmaster's ledgers have grown… creative." Young clerk Tomas Reed said only that he'd "been checking the ledgers twice now, and something isn't sitting right." The Harbor answered in kind — Mother Sella Dunmore reminding all that "the Families built this town on sweat and current, not ledger books," Cutter Halloran hinting at "old river ways the water don't answer to." The Temple sang over the top of it: Calla promising a sanctuary "soon," almoner Wren insisting "every copper is accounted for," and Brother Idris thundering about "smuggling dens festering beneath respectable floors." By Day 4, Idris had already picked up Sabine's ledger accusation and spread it further himself, and Calla had begun answering it publicly to score points against the Guild.
Days 5–16
The circling
The middle of the month was a slow tightening rather than any single break. Tomas returned again and again to Aldric's locked master-ledger — "a clerk learns to see in the dark… a man could build a future on noticing, or see it all burned if he speaks too soon." Mira escalated from hints to open accusation: "our good Guildmaster has been keeping a second set of toll ledgers — one for the Guild's eyes, and one for his own pocket." Sabine kept pressing for the books to be "opened," and Perrin Oake grew visibly rattled, insisting the ledgers were "balanced to the last copper" and that "any whisper to the contrary is ignorance or malice."
All the while the river filled with contraband in plain sight. Cutter advertised specific cargoes — Siltbay rum, Silvertop brandy, untaxed silks — and Grey Adish, the ferryman, took "coin or silence, both, always have." The Temple's Deacon Holt worked the wealthy, repeatedly thanking Lady Sabine Corr for her patronage and, on Day 19, openly seeking out treasurer Perrin for "a matter of mutual investment — I'd hate to see blessings go unshared." Sister Wren, meanwhile, began to press from inside: troubled by "discrepancies in the Festival of Lights donations," asking whether the town had "counted the cost of sustaining" the flame.
Days 27–40
Lines harden, the pulpit breaks first
Mother Sella stopped complaining and started organizing, calling gatherings of Harbor captains "who still have river blood" at the Dunmore house and the Salted Herring. Bryn Dunmore warned that "some of our own are talking to the tollmen — a rope-worthy offense" (he does not know it is Cutter). And the most dangerous word of the month came from the pulpit: Brother Idris named the Dunmore wharf as "the nest where the rats breed," and Mother Sella herself — "her hands black with river-muck." It was the first accusation in Thornwick to name its target in public — and Idris does not appear to know he has just condemned his own mother. The rest of the town stayed coiled: Aldric still pushing his bridge, the ledgers still unopened, the informant still unnamed, the flame still unquestioned. But the pulpit had drawn first blood, and the whole town was listening.